James Oliver Horton: Historical Perspective on Martin Luther King Jr. Day

[Mr. Horton is the Benjamin Banneker Professor of American Studies and History
at George Washington University.]

... The March on Washington at which King delivered his speech was the largest
political demonstration in U.S. history that had occurred up to that point,
an inspiring occasion. It was a day filled with lofty words from a range of
speakers, from NAACP president Roy Wilkins and John Lewis of the Student Nonviolent
Coordinating Committee (SNCC) to actor Charlton Heston representing a contingent
of artists, including Harry Belafonte, Marlon Brando, Diahann Carroll, Ossie
Davis, Sammy Davis Jr., Lena Horne, Paul Newman, and Sidney Poitier. Heston
read a speech prepared by the African American writer James Baldwin, and John
Lewis then reflected the sentiment of the day with his declaration that, “We
cannot be patient, we do not want to be free gradually, we want our freedom,
and we want it now.” Yet no one’s words inspired and electrified
the crowd, the entire nation, and much of the world, more than those of Martin
Luther King.

As we think about that day and about King’s words when we celebrate Martin
Luther King Day, it is fitting that we recall the historical context for the
formation of the modern civil rights leadership. It is especially important
for those too young to remember the man and his times to understand that King
was not the first great advocate of American civil rights, but one in a long
line of those who took the nation’s promise of liberty and equality of
opportunity seriously enough to force the nation to reflect on its shortcomings
and to demand that it live out its dreams. King would not have been completely
comfortable with a day set aside in his honor. He was a man of great public
humility, who realized that he was not the totality of the modern civil rights
struggle but that he only symbolized the work that others were doing and had
done over generations. He also understood that he was both a part and a product
of a long history of human rights struggles, a history that, even now, few Americans
appreciate.

One story that has become part of civil rights lore vividly illustrates this
lack of understanding. During the early 1960s, hundreds of college students
participated in the “jail, no bail” campaign to pack Southern jails
to overflowing, signaling that African Americans would not submit to racially
discriminatory laws that denied them everything from a cup of coffee served
on the basis of equality to the right to vote. The mother of one jailed protester
attempted to post bond for her daughter’s release. The daughter, however,
refused to accept bail, admonishing her mother that, “If your generation
had done this, my generation would not have to.” Despite its dramatic
appeal, the daughter’s accusation was based on an ignorance of history.
King and many others in the movement understood that they were following in
the footsteps of their ancestors, white and black, those who in every generation
since before national independence had struggled for freedom. Among African
Americans and their progressive white allies, the dream of the 1960s was older
than the nation.

The original American dream, set out in Thomas Jefferson’s essay that
became the Declaration of Independence, made no direct mention of racial equality
or of equality of opportunity unrestricted by race, for Jefferson and few of
the national founders considered such a condition practical. During the 1770s
and for the preceding generations of colonial life in British North America,
human slavery had defined much of American race relations. Moreover, nearly
half of those who signed the Declaration that brought the nation into being
were themselves slaveholders whose personal fortunes rested on the uncompensated
labor of bound Africans. Herein was forged the great American contradiction
-- a freedom-loving nation that tolerated human slavery. But for all its contradictions,
the original American dream provided the foundation for a freedom struggle that
began at the nation’s birth and continued beyond the life of Martin Luther
King.

King’s call for America to make good on its commitment to human freedom
and on the country’s belief in the existence of “inalienable”
human rights given by God, rights protected by the U.S. Constitution, drew upon
centuries of tradition. Even before the nation had secured its liberty from
Great Britain, African slaves had made a similar demand on those American patriots
seeking national independence for themselves. In 1773 and 1774, Massachusetts
slaves confronted colonial authorities with the question of freedom for America’s
slaves. "We expect great things from men who have made such a noble stand
against the designs of their fellow men to enslave them," they said. Other
New England slaves issued similar petitions, highlighting the parallels between
their cause and America’s desire to become a "free and Christian
country."...